Frederick Eaton <frede...@ofb.net> writes:

> Is it a CPU architecture? Is it Arch Linux? If you search for "arch
> repository", nothing relevant comes up. Let's call it GNU Arch so
> people can find it with search engines.
>
> Signed-off-by: Frederick Eaton <frede...@ofb.net>
> ---
>  Documentation/git-archimport.txt | 5 +++--
>  1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

I think "Is it a CPU archtecture?" is a red-herring, but between
"What is an Arch Repository?" and "What is GNU Arch?" there indeed
is a vast difference in the quality of information readers would
get; with the proposed commit log message that ends with "so people
can find it with search engines", I am reasonably sure this is an
improvement worth having.

Thanks.

>
> diff --git a/Documentation/git-archimport.txt 
> b/Documentation/git-archimport.txt
> index ea7065336..a595a0ffe 100644
> --- a/Documentation/git-archimport.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/git-archimport.txt
> @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ git-archimport(1)
>  
>  NAME
>  ----
> -git-archimport - Import an Arch repository into Git
> +git-archimport - Import a GNU Arch repository into Git
>  
>  
>  SYNOPSIS
> @@ -14,7 +14,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
>  
>  DESCRIPTION
>  -----------
> -Imports a project from one or more Arch repositories. It will follow branches
> +Imports a project from one or more GNU Arch repositories.
> +It will follow branches
>  and repositories within the namespaces defined by the <archive/branch>
>  parameters supplied. If it cannot find the remote branch a merge comes from
>  it will just import it as a regular commit. If it can find it, it will mark 
> it

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